Viewing 40 posts - 41 through 80 (of 101 total)
  • Quick straw poll? How many of you would let a 7 year old play out on their own?
  • Cougar
    Full Member

    Mind you things where different back then

    Yeah, nonces didn’t exist until 1990, FACT!

    There’s a lot more, faster traffic these days, granted. But roads aside, the world isn’t any more dangerous now than it was five, twenty or a hundred years ago, we’re just so very much better at sensational reporting.

    matt_outandabout
    Full Member

    At what age would you let them have a bit of freedom?

    This is a good question.
    How do we develop trust in our kids abilities to make good choices, risk assess, build relationships and have some ‘common sense’ and ‘awareness’, if we never let them off on their own until they are 13/14/15 and are suddenly released into a world of much more serious risks?

    franksinatra
    Full Member

    NOthing to do with circumstances at all. My seven year old would not be allowed to venture two miles from home without an adult, under any circumstances.

    Difficult not to cast judgements here, I just cannot see how that is ever all right.

    In answer to your question.
    My 5 year old is allowed to the park at the end of our cul de sac, about 20m from the house with line of site.

    My 7 year old is allowed to walk round to her friend house that is about 100m away, not line of site, along a track and path, no roads.

    My 9 year old can go to the park at the other end of the street, can walk to friends in the village but that is all within about 1/2 mile radius.

    I am not prescribing that that is correct, just what works for us and what we feel comfortable with.

    Incidently though, my kids have not really challenged this, they don’t seem to want to venture further afield. Yet

    GrahamS
    Full Member

    letting my kids go to a park 40 minutes walk away on their own? Let me think. Maybe when they’re 14/15?

    14 or 15? That seems pretty strict to me.
    I’d expect most kids would be going to school on their own by that age, which may well be more than 40 minutes away.

    If they can’t even go out alone at 15 how will they cope when they find themselves at uni or in a job just three short years after that?

    DaveyBoyWonder
    Free Member

    I still don’t think I’d let them out of my sight at 7. My eldest is nearly 6 and he’s not at an age where I’d feel comfortable about letting him disappear down the road on his own.

    Over protective? Maybe. Happy that I know where my kids are all the time? Yes.

    binners
    Full Member

    Blimey! The restrictions placed on some of the kids here sound little short of incarceration 😯

    aracer
    Free Member

    Well that answers the question I was going to ask. Just finished year R then? You’ll find they grow up a lot in the next few years (if you let them). I was keeping a very close eye on my oldest at that age, but things are different with my youngest just a year older than that.

    GrahamS
    Full Member

    I’d be interested to know how much freedom people on here had as kids compared to how much they give their own kids. And why.

    Were you a carefree leaf on the wind and want to give your children the same thing?

    Or were you feral and don’t want feral kids?

    Or were you carefully supervised till your 18th birthday before being carefully introduced into a protective habitat?

    matt_outandabout
    Full Member

    GrahamS – While I recognise the freedom I had in childhood, we do live in a changed world. Particularly with traffic and online risks.

    I wonder how many of us who are concerned enough to restrict our children outside, also have similar strict approaches to online safety and viewing? Sadly, I know of a good few 10-15 year olds who have viewed some pretty hardcore porn, a few who are addicted at 12/13. I also know that a good proportion of 10yr old+ children view 18 horror/war/graphic films. I would argue the risk of harm from this kind of behaviour is greater than being active, social and responsible outside.

    matt_outandabout
    Full Member

    Oh, and you should all read this.

    Download for free from his site:
    http://rethinkingchildhood.com/no-fear/

    bikebouy
    Free Member

    I’ve just been looking after my two boy nephews, had them for over a week now, 6 and 8yrs.

    Dear God 😯

    How do you Parents cope? No, seriously ? 😯

    luckily I’m handing them back today… 😆

    The question raised by the OP is a good one. I’ve a place on the coast thats in a very quiet area near a stunning location by the River and Beach. Taking that into consideration I see (on my rides etc. and sailing) literally hundreds of kids about 8/9/10+ out on their own or with other kids the same age. I see all the risks associated with this area, strong tides, boats, rope swings into the River, shingle beaches and of course the Sea itself. As is, it’s a fairly benign place if you know what you are involved with.
    A couple of weeks ago, just before the kids broke up from school a young lad (10) drowned in a slouce gate from one of the many pools by the River. It happens, so sad, they were jumping off the bridge into the River and he got trapped..
    When I was young I was able to run wild, I lived in Fort Lauderdale FL, and in a similar environment to where I live now. We were taught from an early age about Croc’s/Gaters and the myriad of snakes and nasty spiders.. Did this stop us from swimming and playiing out until the Sun went down? Nope. Did we build rafts from reeds and plantation crops, damn right we did.
    Also, I’m a Dinghy Instructor and Windsurfing Instructor and hold a Yachtmaster Cert, taken kids all sorts of places in boats and boards, ages from 5 through to mid teens and enjoyed having them as company and teaching them the ways of the Sea etc. Many years have I done this and when I retire, this is what I’ll continue to do.

    Knowing all this, I’d never let my nephews out alone. But thats more a reflection of the fact that I seriously don;t think they’re mature enough to cope with daily life, never mind the myriad of risks out there 😯 A total reflection of their Parents they are 🙄

    aracer
    Free Member

    How many kids have been killed on the roads since the previous time one drowned playing in the river? (I know you weren’t suggesting kids shouldn’t do that because it’s too dangerous, but thought the point needed making)

    tyrionl1
    Free Member

    codybrennan – Member
    My girls (2 of them) do about 99% of the things that boys do, and the rest they just discard because they’re too sensible.

    Which kind of makes my point about the er ‘quality’ of todays ball free boys…

    And do you know what, the girls of course have total respect for the weeners city boys, soccer divers, emotional ‘retards’ and other blubberers from Gazza down.

    convert
    Full Member

    Which kind of makes my point about the er ‘quality’ of todays ball free boys…

    OK, I’m going to say it – you sound like a bellend. I pity your poor repressed 18yr old daughter who has such a plonker for a father.

    My poor aunt grew up not allowed to go the university like her younger brother (my father) or allowed to learn to drive because her father didn’t think it was right for a woman. But that was in the 60’s and I’d hoped the like had died out with my grandfather’s generation. It sounds like you could be a throwback.

    aracer
    Free Member

    A present for tyrion

    nealglover
    Free Member

    Which kind of makes my point about the er ‘quality’ of todays ball free boys…
    And do you know what, the girls of course have total respect for the weeners city boys, soccer divers, emotional ‘retards’ and other blubberers from Gazza down.

    Are you sure there is actually a point ?

    It really doesn’t come across that way at all.

    OK, I’m going to say it – you sound like a bellend

    You might as well say it.

    Everyone else is already thinking it.

    GrahamS
    Full Member

    So basically your “point” is that boys should have greater freedoms and do more exciting things than girls?

    Because testicles.

    Sounds like the Lannister household is a rare beacon of progressive equality. 😆

    tyrionl1
    Free Member

    convert – Member
    Which kind of makes my point about the er ‘quality’ of todays ball free boys…
    OK, I’m going to say it – you sound like a bellend. I pity your poor repressed 18yr old daughter who has such a plonker for a father.

    I’m sure my ‘repressed’ daughter would fully agree on the bellend comment, but that is not the point I’m making. I’ve brought up four daughters, they all windsurf, mountain bike, can snowboard rings round most of their contemporarys, but that doesn’t mean the male of the species should be deliberately dumbed down to equal them, which is my point.

    Whichever way you play it, boys and girls are not the same, were never supposed to be the same and other than a few, don’t actually want to be the same. That doesn’t mean they shouldn’t be given every opportunity to do what the **** they like, but not letting boys sort out their own differences doesn’t exactly prepare them for the realities of life further down the path, nor preventing them playing with knives, axes under supervision (reference here to Boy Scouts banning sheath knives and the carrying of hand axes)and all manner of other ridiculous supervisory limitations that have come to pass down the years.

    And back on topic whilst it was a tragedy that will have wreaked a terrible effect on the parents I would not add to that grief by holier than thou protestations of better parenting authority buoyed up by this ludicrous pc climate we now find ourselves in.

    GrahamS
    Full Member

    (tyrionl1 == derekrides, yes?)

    ransos
    Free Member

    Not sure this day & age, I was often going missing down the fields when I was 7 & was always getting told off by mum & dad (1963).

    Not sure what people mean by “this day and age”. Doesn’t the evidence show that kids are safer today than they were in the 1960s?

    bikebouy
    Free Member

    All I was doing outlining the recent death on the River, was that it happens and the kid was 10.
    I rode passed the flowers on the bridge and read the postcards and such, then just down the River there were a bunch of kids swinging from a rope into the River and I stopped and asked them about it, it was one of their friends from school..
    Got no idea about Road Deaths TBH.

    GrahamS
    Full Member

    that doesn’t mean the male of the species should be deliberately dumbed down to equal them, which is my point.

    So to you equality means dumbing down boys to level of girls?

    Wow!

    MSP
    Full Member

    Give him a break, he is an oppressed white male in a black lesbian female ruled world.

    tyrionl1
    Free Member

    GrahamS – Member
    that doesn’t mean the male of the species should be deliberately dumbed down to equal them, which is my point.
    Wow!

    So? Are you not suggesting that young lads of today do not experience greater restrictions as a result? Even though it is also true more adventurous would be axe wielding girlies are also swept up in the same trap?

    binners
    Full Member

    tyrionl1
    Free Member

    GrahamS – Member
    that doesn’t mean the male of the species should be deliberately dumbed down to equal them, which is my point.
    So to you equality means dumbing down boys to level of girls?

    Wow!

    No it means that just because we offer equal opportunity to all, that ‘opportunity’ should not be over restricted with cotton wool.

    yunki
    Free Member

    what are these restrictions?

    The only thing I can think of (and the only one you’ve mentioned) is the restriction on carrying knives… which if you remember came about cos ickle hormonal teenagers were slaying each other with them on a weekly basis..

    Cougar
    Full Member

    we do live in a changed world. Particularly with traffic and online risks.

    They can’t play out because of online risks? By that logic surely outside is the safest place for them?

    (tyrionl1 == derekrides, yes?)

    That’s been the consensus here for a while now, yes. Nice to have confirmation, I expect this alter-ego’s days on the forum have just come to a middle.

    Ever feel like you’re playing whack-a-mole?

    convert
    Full Member

    Your first post:-

    Don’t even like my 18 yr old daughter going out now, but did remark to Mrs Lannister after the news, that boys are different and it’s a shame the idea of a seven year old out playing so far from home is bound to be frowned on by the mollycoddlers these days and there will be some serious tutting and handwringing, but…

    So, just to clarify…..

    You appear to believe that giving freedom to explore is a good thing (I do too) and that it’s only mollycoddling handwringers that have stopped this. You had 4 children and were able to parent as you wished and had they been boys they would have been free to roam that sort of distance from home (as you are not a mollycoddling handwringer – of boys) but as they were girls they weren’t. Because testicles(sorry, stolen from GrahamS as I couldn’t come up with anything better!).

    yunki
    Free Member

    sounds like we have a maniacal sexist knife-wielding mollycoddler on our hands

    tyrionl1
    Free Member

    yunki – Member
    what are these restrictions?

    Well the obvious one is that which is under discussion, wether or not ‘they’ get to roam free, as to the rest, quite honestly the only ones that spring to mind were the boy scouts since that body I always felt brought a controlled sense of adventure to that age group, with the chopping down trees, building fires and general scout craft which believe me is lost these days as a young man of my acquaintance a scout leader frequently points out to me.

    Conkers? Did I not read they can’t play conkers. Then Sports Day? It was called Shorts Day and there were no winners and losers, that’ll really set you up for life.

    Solo
    Free Member

    Quick straw poll?

    Not anymore. It’s now turned into a full-on, STW Thermonuclear pitch-fork-athon. Again.

    codybrennan
    Free Member

    tyrionl1 – Member
    codybrennan – Member
    My girls (2 of them) do about 99% of the things that boys do, and the rest they just discard because they’re too sensible.
    Which kind of makes my point about the er ‘quality’ of todays ball free boys…

    No, just proves that equality has kicked in. My girls ride bikes, climb trees, get into scrapes, have fights, break bones. Just as my friends and I did as boys.

    We’ll never win arguments on the internet with perfect strangers of course, but if you think that boys have to do be doing things with are somehow more quintessentially ‘male’ than girls these days, you’ll struggle to find activities.

    codybrennan
    Free Member

    Oh, and they camp with their mothers Guides too, build fires, pitch tents, have fun. Are you feeling outnumbered yet?

    GrahamS
    Full Member

    No it means that just because we offer equal opportunity to all, that ‘opportunity’ should not be over restricted with cotton wool.

    You are conflating two completely different things there.

    I’ve never come across anyone (sensible) saying “we can’t let boys do X any more because girls can’t do it so letting boys do it would be sexist”.

    That’s not a reasonable argument – primarily because who says “girls can’t do X”

    Nice to have confirmation, I expect this alter-ego’s days on the forum have just come to a middle.

    Not confirming – just seems like a strangely familiar character-trait. FWIW, much as I disagree with his opinion I don’t think he has said or done anything particularly hammer-worthy.

    yunki
    Free Member

    Is that’s shorts day thing even true or did you just read it somewhere..?

    It was definitely sports day earlier on in the year at my kid’s school and there was medals and everything 😕
    Our local forest school is running some lovely sessions over the holidays too, for kids 3 and over to mess around with fires and saws and stuff..

    I’m confused

    Maybe they’re just not letting your family get involved?

    GrahamS
    Full Member

    Conkers? Did I not read they can’t play conkers. Then Sports Day? It was called Shorts Day and there were no winners and losers, that’ll really set you up for life.

    Stop reading the Daily Mail. 🙄

    binners
    Full Member

    Conkers? Did I not read they can’t play conkers. Then Sports Day? It was called Shorts Day and there were no winners and losers,

    Its in the EU legislation next to the bit about straight bananas

    ransos
    Free Member

    Is that’s shorts day thing even true or did you just read it somewhere..?

    I believe it’s held during Winterval. 😉

    colonelwax
    Free Member

    derekrides that windsurf shop owner or whatever it was tyrionl1 I’ve been helping at a local cub group (7-10 year old boys and, shock horror, girls). They’ve been using sheath knives, done fire lighting and cooked over an open fire. I’ll let them know they’re banned from it.

Viewing 40 posts - 41 through 80 (of 101 total)

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